Medicine Hat News

Last year of King’s life to be showcased on theatrical tour

- DEEPTI HAJELA

NEW YORK You think you know Martin Luther King Jr.’s story? Tavis Smiley is willing to bet you don’t.

To mark the 50th anniversar­y of King’s assassinat­ion next April, the radio and TV host is planning a nationwide tour of a theatrical production focusing on the last year of King’s life, a time when he was reviled by some for expanding his critique of America beyond its racism to poverty issues and the Vietnam War.

“I don’t want this anniversar­y to come and go without people finally coming to terms with wrestling with who Martin Luther King really was,” Smiley told The Associated Press in an interview on Wednesday.

“Death of a King: A Live Theatrical Experience” is based on Smiley’s 2014 book of the same title. Smiley will narrate from his book, and will be accompanie­d by jazz pianist Marcus Roberts.

The production will travel to 40 cities still to be determined. It is set to kick off on January 15, the day of the national holiday named for King and his actual birthday, and run through April 4, the anniversar­y of the day he was fatally shot while standing on a balcony at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1968.

King’s last year, from the time he gave his powerful “Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break the Silence” speech on April 4, 1967, was an incredibly difficult one, Smiley points out, with critiques coming from all sides over his antiwar stance.

Smiley, who has idolized King since his childhood, is also no stranger to backing down. An outspoken political commentato­r, he came under criticism, heavy at times, from some African-Americans over his willingnes­s to critique President Barack Obama over whether he was doing enough for black people.

He makes no apology for it. “He was running for president, that’s his job. My job is to critique him and hold him accountabl­e, to the best interest of black people specifical­ly and the country more broadly.”

And even in that he circles back to King, pointing out that King was willing to criticize President Lyndon B. Johnson over the Vietnam War, even though he had worked so closely with him years earlier to pass civil rights legislatio­n.

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